Officialsportsbetting.com Golf Betting Could new majors schedule impact Masters?

Could new majors schedule impact Masters?

The Masters is where it’s always been, hitting leadoff in golf’s grand slam. But the three events that follow have been moved around on the calendar.

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Final Round 3-Balls - P. Pineau / D. Ravetto / Z. Lombard
Type: Final Round 3-Balls - Status: OPEN
David Ravetto+120
Zander Lombard+185
Pierre Pineau+240
Final Round 3-Balls - G. De Leo / D. Frittelli / A. Pavan
Type: Final Round 3-Balls - Status: OPEN
Andrea Pavan+130
Dylan Frittelli+185
Gregorio de Leo+220
Final Round 3-Balls - J. Schaper / D. Huizing / R. Cabrera Bello
Type: Final Round 3-Balls - Status: OPEN
Jayden Schaper+105
Rafa Cabrera Bello+220
Daan Huizing+240
Final Round 3-Balls - S. Soderberg / C. Hill / M. Schneider
Type: Final Round 3-Balls - Status: OPEN
Marcel Schneider+150
Sebastian Soderberg+170
Calum Hill+210
Final Round 3-Balls - F. Zanotti / R. Gouveia / R. Ramsay
Type: Final Round 3-Balls - Status: OPEN
Fabrizio Zanotti+150
Ricardo Gouveia+185
Richie Ramsay+185
Final Round 3-Balls - O. Lindell / M. Kinhult / J. Moscatel
Type: Final Round 3-Balls - Status: OPEN
Oliver Lindell+125
Marcus Kinhult+150
Joel Moscatel+300
Final Round 3-Balls - F. Laporta / J. Lagergren / C. Syme
Type: Final Round 3-Balls - Status: OPEN
Francesco Laporta+125
Joakim Lagergren+200
Connor Syme+210
ShopRite LPGA Classic
Type: Winner - Status: OPEN
Ayaka Furue+250
Mao Saigo+250
Jennifer Kupcho+400
Elizabeth Szokol+900
Chisato Iwai+1000
Ilhee Lee+1200
Miyu Yamashita+1200
Rio Takeda+1800
Jeeno Thitikul+2500
Jin Hee Im+2500
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Ryan Fox
Type: Ryan Fox - Status: OPEN
Top 5 Finish-150
Top 10 Finish-400
Top 20 Finish-2000
Matteo Manassero
Type: Matteo Manassero - Status: OPEN
Top 5 Finish+105
Top 10 Finish-275
Top 20 Finish-1100
Kevin Yu
Type: Kevin Yu - Status: OPEN
Top 5 Finish+120
Top 10 Finish-225
Top 20 Finish-900
Matt McCarty
Type: Matt McCarty - Status: OPEN
Top 5 Finish+130
Top 10 Finish-200
Top 20 Finish-900
Lee Hodges
Type: Lee Hodges - Status: OPEN
Top 5 Finish+140
Top 10 Finish-200
Top 20 Finish-850
Mackenzie Hughes
Type: Mackenzie Hughes - Status: OPEN
Top 5 Finish+185
Top 10 Finish-150
Top 20 Finish-625
Jake Knapp
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Top 5 Finish+220
Top 10 Finish-120
Top 20 Finish-455
Andrew Putnam
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Top 5 Finish+280
Top 10 Finish-105
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Cameron Young
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Top 5 Finish+400
Top 10 Finish+140
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Byeong Hun An
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American Family Insurance Championship
Type: Winner - Status: OPEN
Bjorn/Clarke-125
Stricker/Tiziani+450
Flesch/Goydos+1000
Els/Herron+1200
Alker/Langer+1800
Bransdon/Percy+2000
Green/Hensby+2500
Cabrera/Gonzalez+4000
Duval/Gogel+4000
Caron/Quigley+5000
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Major Specials 2025
Type: To Win A Major 2025 - Status: OPEN
Bryson DeChambeau+500
Jon Rahm+750
Collin Morikawa+900
Xander Schauffele+900
Ludvig Aberg+1000
Justin Thomas+1100
Joaquin Niemann+1400
Shane Lowry+1600
Tommy Fleetwood+1800
Tyrrell Hatton+1800
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US Open 2025
Type: Winner - Status: OPEN
Scottie Scheffler+275
Bryson DeChambeau+700
Rory McIlroy+1000
Jon Rahm+1200
Xander Schauffele+2000
Ludvig Aberg+2200
Collin Morikawa+2500
Justin Thomas+3000
Joaquin Niemann+3500
Shane Lowry+3500
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The Open 2025
Type: Winner - Status: OPEN
Scottie Scheffler+400
Rory McIlroy+500
Xander Schauffele+1200
Ludvig Aberg+1400
Collin Morikawa+1600
Jon Rahm+1600
Bryson DeChambeau+2000
Shane Lowry+2500
Tommy Fleetwood+2500
Tyrrell Hatton+2500
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Ryder Cup 2025
Type: Winner - Status: OPEN
USA-150
Europe+140
Tie+1200

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Sergio Garcia’s title defense ends after shooting 81-78Sergio Garcia’s title defense ends after shooting 81-78

AUGUSTA, Ga. – Sergio Garcia didn’t make another octuple-bogey Friday, but he still struggled at Augusta National. Garcia shot 78 to set a dubious record in the defense of his emotional victory at last year’s Masters. Garcia’s 78 on Friday gave him a two-day total of 15-over 159, the highest 36-hole score ever shot by a defending champion. His 81 matched the highest score by a defending champion who missed the cut. Nick Faldo also shot 81 in 1997. Garcia’s 13 at the par-5 15th hole, which matched the highest single-hole score in tournament history, sealed his fate. He hit five shots into the pond that fronts the green on the hole nicknamed Firethorn. On Friday, he made six bogeys and a double-bogey. A birdied at the last allowed him to break 160 for the week. He’ll need to find a way to pass the time this weekend as he waits to return to Augusta National to slip the Green Jacket on this year’s champion. This is the 11th time in Masters history that the defending champion missed the cut, and the second consecutive year. Danny Willett missed the cut last year. The cut fell at 5-over 149, the lowest since 2015. Fifty-three of the 87 players who started this week will play on the weekend. The odd number of weekend participants means that an honorary marker will be used in the first tee time. That role is traditionally filled by club member Jeff Knox, who famously beat Rory McIlroy when they were paired in the 2014 Masters. U.S. Amateur runner-up Doug Ghim was the only one of the six amateurs to make the cut. The Texas senior, who made two eagles Thursday, shot 72-76 to clinch low-amateur honors. Among the players to miss the cut by a single shot were past champions Charl Schwartzel, Sandy Lyle and Jose Maria Olazabal. Here’s a look at other notables to miss the cut: — Thomas Pieters (73-78), who finished fourth last year in his Masters debut. — Patrick Cantlay (75-76), winner of this season’s Shriners Hospitals for Children Open. — Shubhankar Sharma (77-74), who received a special invitation to play this year’s Masters. — Danny Willett (75-76), the 2016 Masters champion. He’s missed the cut in both Masters starts since his win. — Patton Kizzire (76-76), a two-time winner this season. — Joaquin Niemann (76-77), the world’s No. 1 amateur. This is his final tournament as an amateur. — Mark O’Meara (78-81), the 1998 Masters champion. He said this will be his last Masters.

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Why we should all be thankful this week for Alice DyeWhy we should all be thankful this week for Alice Dye

PONTE VEDRA BEACH, Fla. — Had he not possessed the great sense to treat his wife with profound reverence and let her voice be such a roadmap in his life, Pete Dye might not have scripted a World Golf Hall of Fame legacy. Then again, even Alice Dye saw the good fortune in that rare instance when Pete didn’t follow her advice. It was some 40 years ago when Deane Beman, then commissioner of the PGA TOUR, offered Pete the chance to build a stadium course that would serve as the TOUR’s home facility. “Pete, you’re crazy,â€� Alice said at the time, aware of Beman’s prowess as an amateur golfer and TOUR winner. “You can’t build for Deane Beman; he’s too good a player. He’s particular and he’s efficient, he’s all the things that you aren’t, and he’ll have his hands in there trying to tell you what to do and all this stuff.â€� Her warning: “Don’t do it.â€� His reply: “I’d like to do it.â€� Alice was telling this story in 2006 during a roundtable discussion commemorating the 25th anniversary of THE PLAYERS Stadium Course at TPC Sawgrass. Given how it eventually turned out, she had to concede, “Boy, was I wrong, because Deane was wonderful; he absolutely let Pete do his thing, but before we started, Deane said he wanted a stadium golf course.â€� History shows, of course, that Pete Dye delivered beautifully, giving Beman, the PGA TOUR, and the golf world a stadium course by which all stadium courses would be measured. Ah, but the truth is, while he went against his wife’s wishes to take on the project, Pete might not have pulled it off so brilliantly without her uncanny sense of reason. “They were a unique team and you couldn’t have one without the other,â€� said Vernon Kelly, former president of PGA TOUR Golf Course Properties. “There’ll never be another couple like them.â€� “Pete liked to go to the edges of golf-course design,â€� laughed Tim Liddy, who has his own design company now but worked with the Dyes for years, “and Alice was the one who would reign him in with perspective.â€� True, all of that, but in a break from the form of embracing them as a team, one member is being singled out in a fitting remembrance at THE PLAYERS Championship this week – Alice. She died Feb. 1 at the age of 91 and her significant contributions to this world-famous golf course are being recognized in a fitting locale – on the flagstick at the 17th, easily the most recognized hole at THE PLAYERS Stadium Course and arguably one of the most famous in the world. Thank you, Alice is what it reads at the bottom of the flag. But emblazoned across the top is a quote from Alice that helped created the phenomenon that is the island-green 17th. “Why not just make an island green,â€� Alice famously said to her husband after he concluded that he had backed himself into a corner between the par-5 16th and par-4 18th. “You know, Pete wasn’t much on plans,â€� Alice Day said that day back in 2006, “but for Deane to get the money from the bank, (Pete) had to draw a set of plans.â€� Asked how closely they followed those plans, Alice Dye laughed: “We didn’t follow the plans, we followed the sand.â€� As the story goes, Pete Dye – who is 93 and living with Alzheimer’s disease – needed sand throughout this swamp of a landsite and he got the majority from the area around what was going to be the 17th green. “So, one day Pete came to me and he said, ‘You know, we’ve got a big problem.’ He said, ‘I’ve only got 17 holes out there; where’s the par 3 supposed to be? All I’ve got is a gigantic hole in the ground,’ â€� Alice Dye recalled. “He said, ‘Come out and look at it.’ So, we drove out, I walked out, we stood there and looked at that and that’s when I said, ‘Well, why don’t you put the green back where it was and just leave the big hole filled with water?’ So that’s what he did.â€� With anyone else, the story would have been “look at meâ€� material, prime fodder for the ego. Only Pete and Alice Dye were soulmates, two people devoid of ego and totally comfortable with one another to express disagreements. That shined through the first day Alice Dye saw the putting surface that her husband had come up with for the 17th. “When I came out and looked at it and he said, ‘What do you think of it?’ I said, ‘Pete, you know the tournament is in March, right?â€� Alice wasn’t a big fan of the green. The front of the green sloped toward the water in front, the back third of the green sloped back toward the water. “I could just see the TV (coverage) and hear the announcers saying, ‘It’s 2 o’clock and we’re on the air. The first threesome is still on the 17th hole. Nobody has been able to stay on that green.’ â€� Alice and Pete Dye joined everyone else in laughter that day back in 2006 as she told that story, but more importantly is how the famed designer listened to his wife’s opinion back around 1981. “Thankfully,â€� she said, “he enlarged the bunker in front and smoothed the back (of the green).â€� It was vintage Team Dye, dynamic talents who worked seamlessly together. “Just wonderful people, in addition to being so talented,â€� Kelly said. “I just have vivid memories of them standing on mounds of dirt, just talking, not really arguing, but if they disagreed, they just talked it out.â€� Liddy said Alice Dye “was very smart and she gave Pete the sounding boardâ€� he needed. Knowing them as he did, Liddy suggests that Alice’s recommendation for the island-green 17th at TPC Sawgrass wouldn’t have come “out of a single conversation, but from weeks of conversation; that’s how they worked.â€� Alice’s voice was always crucial to their projects, from the viewpoint that she was a polished competitive golfer in her own right and a woman who wouldn’t hesitate to remind the men that a significant cliental needed to be considered. “She was always very interested in where we were going to put the women’s tees,â€� Kelly said, “and that’s not something we gave a lot of thought to, because we were focused on a premier championship test.â€� But Alice reminded them all that TPC Sawgrass was going to host regular golfers, many of them women, and so she devised a method for determining where to put the women’s tees. A quality women’s player from the golf shop walked the course with Team Dye and if it was deemed that the men would hit a 6- or 7-iron into a particular green, Kelly said the woman would go to the green and hit a 6- or 7-iron back toward the tee so they could determine where the landing area would be. Then, the woman would go to the landing area and hit a driver to put perspective on where the women’s tees should be. Years after TPC Sawgrass was up and running, Pete played the 17th hole in a casual round with Alice and safely hit the green. “I don’t understand why they have such trouble with this hole,â€� he told Alice. She replied, “Well, Pete, it’s different when it’s just your wife and that frog looking at you.â€� The next day in a more serious pro-am, Pete Dye stepped to the tee at 17 and “they had beautiful young ladies sitting there with a bucket of balls, in case you hit one in the water,â€� Alice recounted in 2006. “So, Pete strides up there, you know, no problem, and while his ball is still in the air, the girl rolls him another ball.â€� Alice let the laughter fill the room that day, then added that she told her husband: “That hole is really simple, Pete, but it gets tougher when you put a pencil in your hand.â€� Pencils will be in hand the next four days, and so it won’t be so simple a shot at a golf hole that remains a brilliant testament to a wonderful woman of substance. “You can’t be on this property and not think about Alice,â€� said PGA TOUR Commissioner Jay Monahan. “As every player looks at the flag, they will see a tribute to Alice this week, something that we’re very proud of. “We’ll miss Alice.â€�

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